Da: Kloof Booksellers & Scientia Verlag, Amsterdam, Paesi Bassi
EUR 22,95
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: as new. Edited by Simone Schimpf. Text by Marion Ackermann, Kai-Uwe Holze, Simone Schmipf. Ostfildern : Hatje Cantz, 2009. Hardcover. 304 pp. 27 cm. Ills. German & English text. - Art dealer and collector Heinz Teufel, who died in 2007, was one of the great patrons of Concrete Art in Germany. From the time he opened his gallery in 1966 in Koblenz until his period in Berlin in 1998, the gallery maintained a strict profile, regardless of the varying trends on the art market. The collection he and his wife Anette assembled, which contains works by nearly fifty prominent artists, will become part of the permanent collection of the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart in 2009.nThis group of about two hundred paintings, numerous sculptures, and an extensive inventory of prints provides an overview of Concrete works created throughout Europe after World War II. The collection's special quality lies in the inclusion of Eastern European, Italian, and French artists, such as Zdenek Skora, Antonio Calderara, and Aurélie Nemours, whose works are rarely seen in museums. However, there are also ''Swiss classics'' such as Max Bill and Richard Paul Lohse, as well as outstanding works by the important artist Bridget Riley. Condition : as new copy. ISBN 9783775724197. Keywords : ART, concrete art.
Da: Hatt Rare Books ILAB & CINOA, Hägersten, Svezia
EUR 28,36
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloPublisher's cloth, transparent dustjacket (with a very insignificant chip to top of spine). Fine. Ostfildern, Hatje Cantz, 2009. 4to. 308 pp. RIchly illustrated in colour. Text in German and English. Published in conjunction with an exhibition at the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, October 3, 2009 to January 10, 2010. - - - (Catalogue of the Collection, 1.) - - - Art dealer and collector Heinz Teufel, who died in 2007, was one of the great patrons of Concrete Art in Germany. From the time he opened his gallery in 1966 in Koblenz until his period in Berlin in 1998, the gallery maintained a strict profile, regardless of the varying trends on the art market. The collection he and his wife Anette assembled, which contains works by nearly fifty prominent artists, became part of the permanent collection of the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart in 2009. This group of about two hundred paintings, numerous sculptures, and an extensive inventory of prints provides an overview of Concrete works created throughout Europe after World War II. The collection's special quality lies in the inclusion of Eastern European, Italian, and French artists, such as Zdenek Skora, Antonio Calderara, and Aurelie Nemours, whose works are rarely seen in museums. However, there are also ''Swiss classics'' such as Max Bill and Richard Paul Lohse, as well as outstanding works by the important artist Bridget Riley.